Timber iQ April - May 2018 // Issue: 37 | Page 14

EVENTS Delegates networking during the lunch break. Continued from page 10 small enterprises to thrive. We need to be locally inspired and globally relevant. It is the people who do the work, it is people who do the maintenance and are essential to the equation. Globally there are new technologies and innovations in buildings, but South Africa seems to be tied down with restrictive paperwork that limits the architect’s power. Eksteen stressed, “The bigger your company gets, the more of a manager you are and less of a maker you become. We cannot solve problems with the same thinking as when the problems were created. We have new tools and new technologies that we can use to leapfrog other countries and get ahead by using their processes and rethink the value chain of the industry. It’s easier to teach someone how to use a CNC machine than to become a master carpenter – there is simply no time for that. Designers need to create a market for these small enterprises, and we can already start to make a difference.” THE GREEN ECONOMY Werner Slabbert Jnr, a South African developer from Eco Log Homes and a director of the Institute for Timber Construction (ITC), presented views and studies on carbon emissions and how to create a green economy. “Everyone who talks about timber is passionate about their subject and the ITC focuses on creating and maintaining high standards within engineered timber construction,” Slabbert said. When building a timber house, you use almost no water and it’s strange that this obvious major fact is always missed, making timber a much better product than concrete for example when considering sustainability. Timber is one of the few solutions that we have, if not the only one, to combat and absorb carbon and do something with it, as opposed to other solutions that we have in terms of fossil fuels.” Worldwide carbon emissions can kill everything if we don’t address the problem of its pollution. Every year industry produces record numbers of carbon emissions and deforestation adds to the problem. Looking at the global scale in curbing the problem of carbon emissions, South 12 APRIL / MAY 2018 // Africa is the 16th worst polluter in the world, with countries like China, US and India sitting in the top spots. South Africa is significantly contributing to carbon pollution. “The reality is that the world can go to war with us for many centuries, and the most likely result is that it would destroy us, so it’s in our own interest that serious ways and solutions are implemented to start saving our planet,” Slabbert cautioned. Carbon tax is quite a controversial subject, but it is a good solution to be introduced across the world. Carbon is a pollution that needs to be controlled and a carbon tax bill is a mechanism to try and achieve reductions. Irrespective of how carbon tax is looked at, it creates an awareness of the seriousness, and that something must be done by living and implementing alternative solutions. Slabbert concluded, “Historically we have driven change through guilt, by telling everyone how we are doing wrong to the planet, but we now need to drive change through possibilities. We are all part of and passionate about timber no matter how we are involved because we are all part of the `timber marketing team` that will continue to market this fantastic solution to all our customers.” A DIFFERENT VIEW OF INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS Dawid Rabie, a South African architect, presented his views on informal settlements; his idea is that more creative people should think about solutions around the housing crisis. Informal sett